lensman_nh
Member
This is a question for the chemists here.
I've been doing some reading on the roles of bleach and fixer in color processing, and as these things tend to lead to, I ended up down a rabbit hole.
What I have been able to deduce is that a photon hitting a silver halide crystal can liberate an electron that migrates to an electron trap where it reduces the silver ion to metallic silver. Development further reduces the halides to metallic silver.
The bleaching process removes the silver from the image, leaving only the dye clouds from each color emulsion layer. Bypassing the bleach leaves the silver in the film giving a dull, gritty, look beloved by some directors.
Fixing removes any remaining silver halides. B&W processing has no bleach so you are left with metallic silver.
I ended up with 2 questions I couldn't quite get my head around.
Firstly, why does the developer only reduce those areas where the free electron has reduced the halide to silver already? In my very limited experience reduction has been an all or nothing experience, so I would naively expect fogging not latent image development.
Secondly, why does the dye sensitize the silver halide grain? In my very basic understanding the free electron gets knocked off when the photon interacts with the halide atom, and I'm at a loss to understand why the dye makes that more likely.
Thanks
J.
I've been doing some reading on the roles of bleach and fixer in color processing, and as these things tend to lead to, I ended up down a rabbit hole.
What I have been able to deduce is that a photon hitting a silver halide crystal can liberate an electron that migrates to an electron trap where it reduces the silver ion to metallic silver. Development further reduces the halides to metallic silver.
The bleaching process removes the silver from the image, leaving only the dye clouds from each color emulsion layer. Bypassing the bleach leaves the silver in the film giving a dull, gritty, look beloved by some directors.
Fixing removes any remaining silver halides. B&W processing has no bleach so you are left with metallic silver.
I ended up with 2 questions I couldn't quite get my head around.
Firstly, why does the developer only reduce those areas where the free electron has reduced the halide to silver already? In my very limited experience reduction has been an all or nothing experience, so I would naively expect fogging not latent image development.
Secondly, why does the dye sensitize the silver halide grain? In my very basic understanding the free electron gets knocked off when the photon interacts with the halide atom, and I'm at a loss to understand why the dye makes that more likely.
Thanks
J.